Self-help · Similar reads
Books like The Money Class
The Money Class by Suze Orman is about personal finance, financial planning, retirement. If that's what drew you in, here are 6 books that share its DNA — each summarized on Superbook, and ready to chat with in the app.
- The Total Money Makeover
01
Dave Ramsey · Self-help
The Total Money Makeover is Dave Ramsey's step-by-step program for eliminating debt and building wealth, structured around seven sequential "baby steps." Ramsey is a Christian personal finance personality who built his following through a syndicated radio show, and the book reflects his background: the approach is moral as well as financial, framing debt as slavery and personal financial responsibility as a form of integrity.
Read the summary → - Broke Millennial
02
Erin Lowry · Self-help
Broke Millennial is Erin Lowry's accessible guide to financial basics for people in their twenties and thirties who are either starting from scratch or who have accumulated bad habits and debt they want to correct.
Read the summary → - The Psychology of Money
03
Morgan Housel · Economics
The Psychology of Money is Morgan Housel's argument that financial success depends less on technical knowledge than on behavior — specifically, on understanding how your personal history, emotions, and cognitive biases shape every financial decision you make.
Read the summary → - Your Money or Your Life
04
Vicki Robin · Self-help
Your Money or Your Life is Vicki Robin and Joe Dominguez's argument that money is something we trade our life energy for, and that most people in modern consumer society have made that trade without ever stopping to examine the terms.
Read the summary → - 12 Rules for Life
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Jordan Peterson · Self-help
12 Rules for Life is Jordan Peterson's attempt to distill what clinical psychology, comparative mythology, the Bible, and evolutionary biology say about how to live.
Read the summary → - A Mind for Numbers
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Barbara Oakley · Self-help
A Mind for Numbers is Barbara Oakley's guide to learning hard subjects effectively, written primarily for students struggling with mathematics and science but drawing on cognitive science principles that apply to any demanding field.
Read the summary →